Abstract

Urea, labelled with 15N, was applied, at rates equivalent to 0–400 kg N ha −1, to mixed L + F horizon soil materials from a jack pine ( Pinus banksiana Lamb.) forest. The L + F materials were held at 13°C and 33 kPa moisture in three experiments lasting from 6 to 128 days. In the first experiment the immobilization of fertilizer N was determined, in the second the stimulation of microbial activity was measured, and in the third urea reactions in a forest floor without microorganisms were examined. Urea stimulated microbial activity and microbial mineralization of soil N. Total amounts of N immobilized and recovered as organic N, after 128 days, increased with rate of application from 50 to 400 kg urea-N ha −1. The pH and C contents of water extracts of soil increased with increasing rates of urea application. Organic matter in a forest floor treated with urea was shown to solubilize after microbial activity was inhibited by gamma radiation, and this suggests that chemical C release was brought on by the urea. Results from this study were consistent with the hypothesis that microbial activity in urea-treated soil is stimulated by increased availability of C in soil.

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